Partner Spouse Visa

UPDATE: Partner visa application arrangements

People should continue to follow the processes associated with paper applications for those lodged before 18 November 2017. As of 17 November 2017, the Department no longer accepts paper applications either in person of by post, including applications that were posted before 17th but received later. Payment must be made by credit card, paypal, China Union Pay or BPAY at time of lodgement. While health and character checks are important, they are not core criteria to determine eligibility for grant of a Partner visa. However, officers will seek to finalise applications that are both fully documented and have health and character completed before these checks expire.

UPDATE: Partner visa application arrangements Read More »

Can you be engaged and married at the same time to two different people?

Apparently YES. The Federal Court of Australia has just reversed the decision to cancel an Egyptian National’s visa citing the Tribunal made an error assuming a person can only have one marital status at a time. Below is an excerpt from The Australian: “A Muslim bigamist will have his court costs paid by the federal government after the Federal Court found he had his visa cancelled because the migration forms did not provide enough or clear options to describe his relationship status. Egyptian man Mahmoud Mahdy Mahmoud Salama moved to Australia in 2003 on a prospect­ive partner visa and married an Australian woman the same year. He was then granted a provisional partner visa and returned to Egypt in 2004 where he married another woman in Cairo, while still married in Australia. In 2006, Mr Salama was granted a permanent partner visa, while married to both women. He divorced his Australian wife the following year. In 2012, he submitted an applic­ation for a Resident Return visa and listed his relationship ­status as “divorced”. His visa was granted but in 2014 a delegate of the Minister for Immigration wrote notifying of the intention to consider cancelling the visa on the grounds that the information provided was false and that Mr Sal­ama had failed to notify the department of changes in circumstances, being the birth of his child to his wife from Cairo. Mr Salama’s visa was cancelled that year. He appealed against the decision to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal and the Federal Circuit Court, arguing that in his view his marital status was divorced­, because he was aware that his Egyptian marriage was not recognised in Australia as he was married at the time to his Australian wife. Mr Salama also told the Admin­istrative Appeals Tribunal that he had never had a commitment to or been in a marriage-like arrangement with his Egyptian wife, as the marriage was forced upon him by his family. He said the couple had only lived together for short periods of time and he wanted to sponsor their four children to come to Australia because of the difficult circumstances in Egypt. Mr Salama said that, since 2013, he has been in another ­relationship with an Australian woman. She told the court she had become engaged and married to Mr Salama in accordance with Islami­c ­rites in April 2014. Federal Court judge Melissa Perry found that the Administrative Appeals Tribunal fell into jurisdictional error by assuming there was only one correct answer to describin­g his relationship status. She remitted the matter back to the tribunal for determination and ordered the Minister pay Mr Salama’s costs in the Federal Circuit Court and Federal Court.”

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Applying for a Partner Visa? Choose Australia!

A Partner Visa in 2016 comes with a $6,865 application fee and yet this has not prevented tens of thousands from applying for a visa to come to Australia to live with their partners. Approximately 131,218 partner visa applications were lodged over 2 years. The success rate of Partner visas as a whole is approximately 78%, which is quite a high success rate. Why isn’t it 100%? This is because unfortunately some relationships do break down during the course of the application and there are also non-genuine relationships too. Countries responsible for the majority of the Partner Visa applications are shown in the diagram above. It perhaps comes as no surprise that 7 out of the 9 countries have a very family oriented culture, which means spouses are willing to pay more to bring their other half to Australia. If you are looking to bring your partner/spouse to Australia and not quite sure what the procedures are, call us today for a Friendly and Obligation-Free Consultation today.  

Applying for a Partner Visa? Choose Australia! Read More »